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<div style="float:left;margin:0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0;">[[File:Battle of the Fords of Flotir.jpg|280px]]</div>The '''Battle of the Fords of Flotir''' was the first major land battle of the [[War of the Velaran Succession]]. Fought on 6 February 1769, it saw an army under [[Kenti of Ja'ekha]] engage a large [[Kingdom of the Isles of Velar|Velaran]] force under [[Atnas Laidakon]] on the eastern bank of the [[Flotir]]. The two commanders hastened to the frontier as soon as war broke out, with Laidakon gaining the ford two days before the Ja'ekhans' arrival. He positioned himself between Kenti and the river, hoping to stop their advance there, but found himself outnumbered. His army suffered heavy losses under withering cannon fire and was unable to launch a counter-assault, breaking by mid-afternoon and abandoning the field.
<div style="float:right;margin:1em;">[[File:Châteauneuf-sur-Cher-Basilique-NDDE-Crèche-Noël-01.jpg|200px]]</div>'''Christmas in Great Nortend''' is a widely celebrated holiday, as in most {{wp|Christian}} countries. As one of the [[Nortish Rite#Calendar|great high festivals]] observed by the [[Church of Nortend]], it commands a place in the religious life of the nation second only to Easter. As such, Christmas is normally celebrated focussing on religious tradition, commemorating the actual birthday of Jesus Christ, although more secular customs have always been a staple of the season since its inception in Great Nortend with the arrival and spread of Christianity in the 8th century.  


Laidakon nevertheless managed to form a rearguard out of the rout, which prevented Kenti from quickly gaining the river and seizing land in Retikh, although Velaran resistance in the province melted away until the [[Capture of Zarthalin|first siege of Zarthalin]] two weeks later. Modern consensus is now that Kenti's victory at the Flotir effectively guaranteed Trellin's victory on the mainland. ('''[[Battle of the Fords of Flotir|See more...]]''')
Christmas is celebrated on December 25th, but is followed by various festivals until Epiphany on January 6th, making the „Twelve Days of Christmas”. Christmas is preceded by the six weeks of Advent which is characterised by penance and fasting. Hence, when the Christmas season, called Christmastide, arrives, it is all the more spectacularly marked by festivities, feasting, shopping and general merriments. Christmas is also the beginning of the Christmas term, one of the four quarterly terms of the [[Civil year of Great Nortend|civil year]] which begins on Michaelmas, September 29th, in the Michaelmas term. ('''[[Christmas in Great Nortend|See more...]]''')
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Latest revision as of 22:59, 2 January 2022

Châteauneuf-sur-Cher-Basilique-NDDE-Crèche-Noël-01.jpg

Christmas in Great Nortend is a widely celebrated holiday, as in most Christian countries. As one of the great high festivals observed by the Church of Nortend, it commands a place in the religious life of the nation second only to Easter. As such, Christmas is normally celebrated focussing on religious tradition, commemorating the actual birthday of Jesus Christ, although more secular customs have always been a staple of the season since its inception in Great Nortend with the arrival and spread of Christianity in the 8th century.

Christmas is celebrated on December 25th, but is followed by various festivals until Epiphany on January 6th, making the „Twelve Days of Christmas”. Christmas is preceded by the six weeks of Advent which is characterised by penance and fasting. Hence, when the Christmas season, called Christmastide, arrives, it is all the more spectacularly marked by festivities, feasting, shopping and general merriments. Christmas is also the beginning of the Christmas term, one of the four quarterly terms of the civil year which begins on Michaelmas, September 29th, in the Michaelmas term. (See more...)

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